196 Quotes About Anthropology
- Author F. Scott Fitzgerald
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So before he left he made most of his life insurance over to us. That's in case he doesn't come back—those trips are dangerous of course.”“I should think so,” I said, ”especially with three anthropologists.
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- Author C.G. Jung
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If I want to understand an individual human being, I must lay aside all scientific knowledge of the average man and discard all theories in order to adopt a completely new and unprejudiced attitude. I can only approach the task of understanding with a free and open mind, whereas knowledge of man, or insight into human character, presupposes all sorts of knowledge about mankind in general.
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- Author Paul La Farge
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The paradox of anthropology: to see something, you had to be outside of it, but when you were outside of it, you couldn't see it for what it was.
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- Author Claude Lévi-Strauss
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Every effort to understand destroys the object studied in favor of another object of a different nature; this second object requires from us a new effort which destroys it in favor of a third, and so on and so forth until we reach the one lasting presence, the point at which the distinction between meaning and the absence of meaning disappears: the same point from which we began.
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- Author Howard Morphy
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There is a dialectic between common humanity and particular ways of being human.
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- Author Deborah Levy
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I have researched aboriginal culture, Mayan hieroglyphics and the corporate culture of a Japanese car manufacturer, and I have written essays on the internal logic of various other societies, but I haven't a clue about my own logic.
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- Author Jack Weatherford
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She lived in an environment that few people in the world have ever been able to survive. What knowledge did she have that made that possible? How did she survive for so long in a place that would kill most of us within days? Soon after my visit the old woman died, and now we may never know.
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- Author Marilynne Robinson
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I am not the first to suggest that anthropology arose in Western thought in an inauspicious period, one characterized by colonialism and so-called racial science. But I seem to be more or less alone in my conviction that, in all its primitivity, this anthropology continues to color the ways in which we conceive of human nature.
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- Author Friedrich Hölderlin
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Man kann auch in die Höhe fallen, so wie in die Tiefe. ("One can as well fall into height as into depth")
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